Thoughts on classical music in London, on the web and beyond. By Gavin Dixon.

Saturday, 8 June 2013

Carolin Widmann Alexander Lonquich Wigmore Hall 7 June 2013

Schubert:
Violin Sonata in A D574; Fantasy in C D934

Poulenc:
Violin Sonata

Ives:
Violin Sonata No. 4 “A Children’s Day at the Camp Meeting”

Carolin
Widmann- violin

Alexander
Lonquich – piano

Wigmore
Hall, London 7 June 2013

Like
many soloists, Carolin Widmann is shown off to her absolute best by the Wigmore
Hall acoustic. She has a narrow tone, focussed and occasionally gritty. It is
very elegant though, and she is able to produce plenty of timbral variety,
though never a large or round sound. That doesn’t matter at the Wigmore Hall,
because her playing is always clearly audible here, and in this acoustic the
focus of her tone translates to intimacy. So, rather than large rhetorical gestures,
instead we hear the details up close; they’re always interesting, and they are
usually very beautiful as well. The two Schubert works on this evening’s
programme appear on a disc that Widmann and Lonquich recently recorded for ECM.
I was less impressed with the results there. The big, warm recording
environment that is a trademark of the ECM label ought, by rights, to
compensate for the lack of body in Widmann’s tone, but in this case it seems to
have the opposite effect, isolating her in a broad soundscape that she is
unable to fill. The Wigmore acoustic doesn’t make Widmann sound any warmer, but
it does give her the presence and the immediacy that the ECM sound
conspicuously lacks.

Pianist
Lonquich is at the other end of the spectrum. His sound is warm and enveloping.
Again, it is not a huge sound, but it is much more robust than Widmann’s. The
two complement each other perfectly. Lonquich often behaves more like a soloist
than Widmann does, and in the Schubert sonata it often seemed that the rubato
impulses and the phasing were coming more from the piano than from the solo
line. But that didn’t matter a bit, especially as the accompaniments in all
these works carry so much of the musical interest.

There
is never any feeling of undue certainty in Widmann’s playing. In fact, while
everything she performs is technically correct (bar a few tuning slips),
nothing ever seems completely secure. The narrowness of Widmann’s tone is a
related issue, and it often seemed that her bow did not have the purchase it
needed on the strings. There were occasional extraneous sounds from the strings
themselves, some of the passage work was irregular, and some notes failed to
sound immediately. Perhaps this is just a more reticent approach to the violin;
it is certainly at odds with the more strident (more masculine?) sound that
predominates among leading soloists today. On her recordings, these problems
are minimised, but that reticence always remains.

The
problem/issue/quirk was most apparent at the opening of the first work, the
Schubert Sonata in A D574. The introduction to this sonata is, or should be
absolutely exquisite, atmospheric chords from the piano over which the violin
plays a simple, unadorned melodic line. The extreme exposure here, and the
requirement to reduce the vibrato to almost nothing, highlighted Widmann’s
insecurities, with her tuning and articulation particularly problematic. Fortunately,
Schubert gives a second chance, including the atmospheric introduction in the
exposition repeat. And this time it was just ideal: innocent and plaintive, but
hinting at the complexities that are to follow. Lonquich treats the
accompaniment of this first movement as if it were a solo piano sonata, but
Widmann has enough ideas of her own, and enough volume, to ensure he never
steals the show. Between them, they produce quite a Romantic interpretation,
with plenty of rubato and intense emotions in every phrase. By the time we get
to the recapitulation, we realise just how far we’ve come. That atmospheric
introduction returns for a third time, but now all the naivety has gone, and the
final statement of the themes from here on, while virtually identical on paper,
is given with a sense of worldliness and reluctant sophistication.

Poulenc’s
Violin Sonata is a rarity on concert programmes, but its inclusion on this one
was clearly warranted. Widmann’s focussed tone gives direction and purpose to
Poulenc’s occasionally wayward melodic lines, while Lonquich’s boisterous
accompaniments fully realise the music’s playful side. Widmann occasionally struggles
to produce the quantity of tone that the composer expects, which can strain the
longer climaxes, but she compensates with the energy she puts into the
scurrying details elsewhere. The finale is classic Poulenc, with surprises and
changes of direction at every turn. Widmann and Lonquich manage to keep the
suspense up right to the end, with every new idea sounding fresh and original.

Ives’
Fourth Violin Sonata is even more of a rarity, and perhaps justifiably so. But,
like the Poulenc, it is a work that makes the most of these players’ ability to
give focus and purpose to otherwise only tenuously connected musical ideas.
Ives structures his sonata around a fairly involved narrative, which fills a
whole column of the programme. From a musical perspective, the unifying ideas
are hymn tunes, which are repeatedly abused in a variety of ways. Widmann’s
brusque tone at louder dynamics seems appropriate in this music, and sits well
with the composer’s distanced approach to his material. And again, the broad
and sometimes frenetic playing of Lonquich gives weight to the proceedings,
ensuring the music never sounds trivial.

The
highlight of the concert was the last work, the Schubert Fantasy in C D934.
Like the earlier sonata, the Fantasy opens in a nebulous atmosphere, with
tremolo chords in the piano introducing a plaintive melody on the violin. This
time Widmann was the music’s wavelength from the very start, and the whole
performance was excellent from beginning to end. There is a lot of passion and
intensity in this music, but it all falls under a carefully controlled emotional
contour. After the impassioned opening statement of the themes, the intensity
drops, as a series of variations begins, in quieter dynamics and over lighter
textures. But as the variations continue, the intensity gradually rises again,
slowly and evenly over the course of the second half of the work, and the
controlled but emotive performance here was ideal, leading to a truly
spectacular coda.

For
an encore, Widmann and Lonquich played the third movement of Schumann’s Second
Violin Sonata, another excellent choice. The movement is slow and dreamy, but
with occasional melodic outbursts that, in this performance, seemed to come out
of nowhere. As with everything that had gone before, and especially the
Schubert Fantasy, the Schumann was poignant, focussed, intense in so many
subtle ways, and, above all, filled with an exquisite beauty from beginning to
end.

.

Gavin Dixon is a writer, journalist, editor and blogger specialising in classical music. He writes reviews and articles for a number of publications and websites. Gavin has a PhD on the Symphonies of Alfred Schnittke and is currently a Visiting Research Fellow at Goldsmiths, University of London. He is also a member of the editorial team behind the ‘Alfred Schnittke Collected Works’ edition, which recently began publication in St Petersburg. More information on Gavin’s writing activities can be found at his website: www.gavindixon.info